Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 148, 26 April 1912 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THEtRICHMOITD TAJULDUm AXD SCXTEIJEGBAM, FRIDAY. APRIL 26,. 1912.
Tfce IHetniond Palladium asd Snn-Telcgrain Published owned br to PAIXJLDITTM PRINTIKO CO. Xssaed Every Evening- Except Bmdtr -Corner North 9th utdA streets. ntoraxu fcnd S-TiNm ghaoe tna OUios, 294 New DepartRICHMOND rWPIAWA luulolpk a. LMdS. ! WCTB8CHIPTION TERMS la Richmond fS.OO pr year (tn advance) or 10c per week. BURAL routes Oae rsar, in dvano r2i Six moot. In advance MI Oaa month. In advance 4ddrM ohakged a often a dewea. both now and old addressee muit o riven. Subscriber will pleas remit order, which should bo given J PoolOod to ran; nam will n bo entered until paunt la receve. MAIL, SUBSCRIPTIONS Ope yoar, in advance W-" ix month, tn advance ? On month, in advance Bats red at Richmond, Indiana, poet ottice a aocond claaa ma.ll matter. JTevr York Repraaentatlvea Payee flr Touns, aO-34 West 83d street, and 286 WHt 82nd atrset. New Tork, N. Y. Chicago Representatives Payne & Young, 747-718 Marquette Building, Cataago, JUL
The Association of Amee-
I lean Advertiaere baa ex
amined and certified t the caVcaiatioaef thia peib-.
Ucation. The figures of circalatiea aontained In the Association's report only are guaranteed. Association of American Advertisers
No. "9-
.Whitehall Bltfj. M. T. City
Heart to HearC Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE.
HOW SHE DOES IT. I know a home from which you would scarcely be abla to drive the children with a club. It la not a fine home nor expensive in Its upkeep. It is Just comfortable. And it Is presided over by a woman of rare sense and great tact. She cares more for her children than for fine clothes or society or the woman's club. She wants her children to have a good time and knows how to give it to them. To Illustrate: There are two boys, fine young cubs, who never go grumbling to their tasks Mother knows how to make sport out of drudgery. And if the task is hard there is a sure reward at the end. There are a big yard and a garden. The boys work hard in the garden and enact high Jinks in the yard. There axe a big tree, the barn, the alley Noisy? Of course. And hard on clothes? Surely. But You will find a lot of neighborhood boys there, which is an Infallible test of the sort of mother young fellows have.
The boys have a room of their own. It happens there are two windows on the west. There are striped awnings over the windows. A lot of people in that neighborhood are richer, but they never think of buying awnings "Just for the boys' room." BesidesDown in the basement are plenty of tools and soft pine boards. Things are a bit topsy turvy there. You should see the "contraptions" the boys make. And if by any means they may contrive and make something for mother why, that is best of all. In the yard are a swing and a hammock. To be sure, they break down occasionally when too many kids tumble in at one time. Ropes and hammocks do not cost much. And nobody is ever scolded. There is a girl also. She Is something of a romp. The neighbors call her "a tomboy." She is as lithe as the family cat, and there are freckles on her nose. It is noted when the neighborhood girls play with the dolls and mimic their mammas they do so at this girl's home. Elsewhere they might rumple things and incur remarks. More than all else In the vocabulary of this mother there is no such word as "Don't" How does she keep her children at borne? This is the recipe: A little good sense, a few ounces of patience, a pinch of tact. Mix with real mother love.
A Great Movement.
DIET AND HEALTH HINTS By DB. T. Jt. ALLEN Food Specialist
TEN PER CENT. ALBUMINOUS ELEMENT SUFFICIENT FOR ADULTS. "Superior physical and probably superior mental power cornea from reducing the amount of protein," says Professor Fisher, the well-known food experimenter of Yale University. This means practically a reduction In the use of lean meat and gga, specially the whites of SB. But ho adds, "I am by no means convinced that a strictly vegetarian diet is better than a diet containing some animal and even fleeh foods." It has been frequently euggested In thee Hint that the customary amount of proteld should be reduced. I have found by many tests that ten per cent, of albuminous food Is sufficient In the diet of the adult. This can be obtained without the use of eggs, flesh, ehee, nuts or even milk. The cereals, with the exception of rice, contain sufficient. I have used no meat, eggs, cheese or fish for several years. The dlt f any adult can b Improved by exohjdmg meat and egg afaegsther.
Next woo: ' Btctl uiOiKtwdTbatv1 as h er goest some of the most prominent eductors-iatn United 'Skates, whotwttl be In this city fur two days tor the purpose ofAeoasiderJngwways and means for promoting votuntary Bible study by the college and university students. This conTentlonls orfy'a.part of a great movement sweeping over fhe oountry from coast to coast whteh has as its object a better Americas citizens hip. It has . swept oHtaldethecharches and Is being takes into the factories, i homes, . brartXMesilioustJS and Institutions of learning, and is being directed by some ofthe most able and influential men In the United States, and the army sthey lead is composed of millions of men and women of all classes andconditlona. There can only be one result of such a movement complete success. It has reached and Interested men who did not know what the inside of a church looked like. It has taught men who had seldom or ever loo toed into a Bible that religion Is broader than -the doctrines preached-from i the pulpits and is necessary to their welfare, and happiness. This great religions movement-dovetails into the equally great progressive political t movement abroad in the land. Both have as their object better citizenship. Both cry out against corrupt government and stand for a pnren democracy.
Insulting The Dead.
Thursday evening. .last week, four days after the news of the Titanic disaster had been, made, public, the Huntington, Ind., Herald, printed the follow lug remarkable editorial squib: "Major Archibald Ciav ering'Willingham Butt neglected to call upon the king of Italy. The king thus imissedUhe only sight in the world Which rivals his own Italian sunset." Truly the King of Italy did miss a-sight. He missed seeing a man & real man. If the Italian monarcli had a .few thousand men moulded of the same clay Major Butt was made. of, his troops today would be storming the gates of Constantinople. The Heraid's vulgar slap at a gallant officer who went smiling to his death after 'having saved scores of women passengers on the Titanic was, to say the t least, uncalled for, and the -Herald owes an apology to its readers.
The Theaters
President Taft screwed up his courage to the sticking point yesterday, under the spur of his political advisors, and shied a castor in the general direction of Col. Theodore Roosevelt, .to the great delight of the fighting ex-presldenUThebroadslde T. R willtfire in reply will probably break a fewiwlndows.Mr.Taft is in for it Heis far too corpulent to get away.
Too bad itt rained on ArbortDay, still there t is one consolation tittle drops of water make the tittle rtreelets grow.
The political 'battle now raging in old Bay State makes the Bunker Hill fight look tame-in comparison. President Taft is now strewing hotshots broadcast over the state, and he will be followed by the ColoneL horse, foot and artillery.
MASONIC CALENDAR
Friday, April 26. King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4, R. A M. Special Convocation. Work in Royal Arch degree.
This is the time when every one, old and young, takes a blood purifier, blood regulator, stomach cleanser. Holllster'8 Rocky Mountain Tea has given thousands of people marvelous results; it will you. Try lttthis Spring without fail. 35c. Tea or Tabs. A. G. Luken.
Three Kinds of Men. There are three kinds of men: in the world those (the best) who make Jokes, those who can enjoy Jokes and those (the worst kind) who attempt to explain Jokes. G. K. Chesterton in London News.
A Chemical Experiment. When the genial Quaker, Isaac T. Hopper, met a boy with a dirty faca or hands he would stop him and inquire if he ever studied chemistry. The boy, with a wondering stare, wonld answer, "No." "Well, then, I will teach thee how to perform a curious chemical experi
ment," said Friend Hopper. "Go
home, take a piece of soap, put It in water and rub it briskly on thy hands and face. Thou bast no idea what a beautiful froth it will make and how much whiter thy skin will be. That's
a chemical experiment. I advise thee
to try it." Life of Isaac T. Hopper.
Plenty of Turtle Soup Saturday all day at EM Cutter's,
AftR Kniith 4th fit. 26-2t
' THIS DATE IN HISTORY"
APRIL 26TH. 1665 Great Plague of London began. 169S Governor Fletcher again united Maryland and Pennsylvania, and assumed authority. 1711 David Hugo, Scottish historian and philosopher, born. Died Aug. 25,1776. 1819 The Odd Fellows' society first organized in the United States at Baltimore. 1857 Rev. Henry D. Juncker-consecrated Roman Catholic bishop of Alton. 111. 1865 J. Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Lincoln, shot and his accomplice, Harrold captured. 1880 Alexander Mackenzie resigned the leadership of the Liberal party in Canada. 1904 Labor party came Into power in Australia.
ELDERLY FOLKS! CALOMEL SALTS
IT
AND
CATHARTICS
ARE
FOR
Ml
Harmless, gentle "Syrup of Figs" is best to cleanse your stomach, liver and 30 feet of bowels of sour bile, decaying food, gases and clogged-up waste.
You old people. Syrup of Figs is particularly for you. You who don't exercise as much as you need to; who like the easy chair. You. whose steps are slow and whose musoles are less elastic. You most realize that your liver and ten yards of bowels have also become less active. Don't regard Syrup of Figs as physic. It stimulates the liver -and bowels Just as exercise would do If you took enough of it It is not harsh like salts or cathartics. The help which Syrup of Figs gives to a torpid liver and weak, sluggish bowels is harmless, natural and gentle. When eyes grow dim, you help them. Do the same with your liver and bowels when age makes them lees active. There la nothing more important. Costive, clogged-up bowels mean that decaying, fermenting food is clogged there and the pore or duota In these thirty feet of bowels suck this decay
ing waste and poisons into the blood. You will never get feeling right until this is corrected but do it gently. Don't have a bowel wash-day; don't use a bowel irritant. For your sake, please use only gentle, effective Syrup of Figs. Then you are not drugging yourself, for Syrup of Figs is composed of only luscious figs, senna and aromatics which can not injure. A teaspoonful tonight will gently, but thoroughly, move on and out of your system by morning all the sour bile, poisonous fermenting food and clogged-up waste matter without gripe, nausea or weakness. But get the genuine. Ask your druggist for the full name, "Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna.- Refuse, with contempt, any other Fig Syrup unless it bear the name prepared by the California Fig Syrup Company. Read the laheL
(Oopyrufiit, 1911. by Joseph B. Bowls
Spring Wall Paper - r yea a wider cho
ter and more stylish wall papers than think w can save money for you too.
It's wall paper time again
e can offer
roa a wider choice of -bet-
roe can find elsewhere. We Coane In and let us prove it.
Interior Decorator
Fresco Pointer
Phone No. 2901
No. 504 Main Street
THE BOHEMIAN GIRL "The Bohemian Girl." played to one of the biggest house of the focal theatrical season at the Gennett last evening. This was a tribute to myat; art. And the company which peeeeated
it. Because nccae was especially Informed as to the status and calibre of the latter. "The Bohemian GM." la, however, a standard opera, a sort of near-classic And if half way presented should be interesting. Therefore it was patronized. That is one of the reasons. Another was an enterprising advance man who called on muaiolana, theater-goers, newspapers and educational institutions. Metropolitan operatic cannot be expected of a road company which strikes a town the size of Richmond. And the company which presented "The Bohemian Girl" here was not brilliant in either principals or chorus. But It was well balanced and gave a creditable and enjoyable presentation both musically and theatrically. Joseph Sheehan, well known to theater-goers of this country and who has. in the past been with some of the Savage companies, sang the title role and sang it well. Sheehan's voice has retained its freshness and appeal in certain registers and his use o! falsetto in one of his solos was artistically effec
tive. In "Then . you'll remember me,"
Sheehan achieved his most superlative effect, this charming lyric lending Itself admirably to the exploitation of thoee tonal oame of his voice whloh have given him reptatioa. Theatrically, however. Sheehan is not convincing, his histrionic gift being negligible and hi avoirdupois excessive. Gladys Caldwell made an alluring "Arline," the heroine of the plot stolen from her father by gypsies (the sto
ry Oi ue opem l im .ra uu . u iui repetition here) and her singing of the familiar "I Dreamed I Dwelt in Marble Halls" was received with enthusiasm The other principals were well cast, Francis J. Tyler, as "Devilahoof." doing some capital comedy "business" in the last act, while William J. Jorgensen. as "Florensteln," sustained his role as the opera's comedian. The chorus was sufficiently proficient and. Indeed, had some very good voices among the men. The Gennett orchestra, augmented by the six muelclana carried by the
company, interpreted Balfe's score Intelligently and with excellent musicianship, and. altogether, the presentation was an enjoyable one. The score of "The Bohemian Girt," however, is too saccharine in quality, too cloying to the musical taste. It must be interpreted with vivacity, to hold the attention and this was the lack in last evening's presentation. The principals sang correctly enough but with little theatric verve. Opera, in and of Itself, whether grand, light or comic, is so artistically anomalous and so artificial in both its conception and its consequent executant, that it must be imbued with life
by the interpreters, asd tt ta
rt toons Its) Opera, la
r4 Mood. Realism ss-tismasBCBte sett
basis is tn inilTiiTTj artiiklaL So that tU trhsnnh Bee tn its
cat phase and their Interpretation.
Ana these crest be eunresM to
ceei rts dramatic preposterovsneee. Thes remarks are merely hy
-way and apply no more to "The Bohe-
3fcS" than, tm Triatan and la
load,- -Cacrman- or -Saloooe.-
It fts v good tbfjas tor the town to
have the standard, opera presented.
even in an average fashion, for it afford opportunftle for contrast and
Looxnpextson. And the public cannot be
too deeply familiarised with good mu-
E. a W.
the t1 .
A Remedy No Family Should Do Without
No matter how healthy a human being- may be it is safe to say that not many months are passed without some obstruction of the bowels, in other words, constipation, even it only temporary. The bloating, the dull feelingmay start after the evening- meal. If a laxative la not taken that nirht it la certain that sleep will not be sound, and you will awaken unrefreehed. Hence, It is important for you and for all the members of your family that a good, reliable laxative be always kept in the houae for juet such emergenoy. It is sure to be needed, and when needed you want it at hand. No family that la careful of its health can do without such a remedy. But the question of which remedy to have on hand ia also of vast Importance. The laxative moat highly recommended by the majority of intelligent Americana as bein? beat for babies and grownups Is Dr. Caldwell'a Syrup Pep
sin. It la a liquid laxative-tonic, mild, and never gripes, is effective on robuat people and can be given with safety to
an infant. Children like it because of
these gentle qualities and because it la pleasant to the taste. It ia the best all-around remedy you can have in the houae for any disorder of the stomach, liver and bowels, and many people like Emma Blankenahip, Bedford. Ind.. and H. O. Watson, Bowie, Ind., aay they would as soon be without the necessities aa without Dr. Caldwell'a Syrup Pepsin. Anyone wishing to make a trial of this remedy before buying it in the regular way of a druggist at fifty centa or one dollar a large bottle (family size) can
have a sample bottle sent to the home free of charge by almply addressing Dr. W. B. Caldwell! 405 Washington Bt, Montlcello. 111. Tour name and addr on a postal card will do.
I Ann Here ftp Make ffit Warmni For Yom I
"A little over a year ago I was sent to Richmond by the Marshall Furnace Company a their local representative. They wanted to locate a man in territory near here, and thought that Richmond would be a good place, so as an experiment I was put here to see what I could produce. "The experiment has been a success and I am now a permanent fixture In your city, and the Marshall Furnace Company has established an agency here and located one of their expert installers in the city, as well as myself." This Company has manufactured and installed Furnaces for thirty-two years, and a word with any of our Three Hundred customers in Richmond win satisfy you that they know their business. Where others fall is where we succeed. We have taken out furnaces of other makes every week since the first of January, and replaced them with Wolverine's. We installed 70 furnaces In your city in 1912, and the exceptionally cold winter Just past, proved their Worth. We guarantee absolute satisfaction or no pay. Get your furnace in early; nothing to pay until fall, then one-half of contract price, the balance to be paid when YOU are satisfied that furnace is satisfactory, with a written guarantee to take furnace out and refund your money in the spring if we fail to heat your home. Call me up or drop me a postal, and I will call and give you free and without obligation the benefit of my experience in laying out successful heating plants. B. D. WELCH Local representative for the Marshall Furnace Company of Marshall, Mich, 25 South 17th street. Phone 2739.
BANK STATEMENT
No. 291. J. S. Beard, Pres. John M. Manning. Vice-Pres.; R. E. Swallow, Cashier. Report of the condition of the Northern Wayne Bank, a private bank at Economy, in the State of Indiana, at the close of Its business on April 18, 1912.
Resources. 1. Loans and Discounts
2. Overdrafts 3. U. S. Bonds (none) 4. Other bonds and securities (none) 5. Banking House C Furniture and Fixtures
Other Real Estate (none) Dse from Banks and Trust Companies
Cash on Hand 3,220.19 Cash Items (none)
11. Premiums Paid on Bond; (none) 12. Current Expenses (none) 13. Taxes Paid (none) 14. Interest Paid (none) 15. Profit and Loss (none)
i . S.' 9. 10.
.$38,338.59 147.18
1,250.34 1,900.00
3,060.33
Total Resource $471C9
Liabilities. 1. Capital Stock paid in... $10,000.00 I. Surplus 500.00 3. Undivided Profits (none) 4. Exchange. Discounts and Interest 502.SI 5. Profit and Loss (none) 6. Dividends Unpaid (none) 1. Demand Deposits 29,234.93 '8. Demand Certificates. . . 7,658.92 9. Time Deposits (none) 10. Time Certificates (none) 11. Certified Checks (none) 12. Cashier's Checks (none) 13. Due to Banks and Trust Companies (none) 14. Bills Payable (none) 15. Notes, etc, Rediscounted (none) Total Liabilities ,47.91&C
ftg Delicious
perfectly raised They will be wholesome and delicious and will not "soak fat" if you use Romford. For producing
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onmff(0)iP(ril VV THE WHOLESOME BAKING POWDER Tine Best of Hie BIflb-Grade Balrtna Fov fliers No Alam
Mr. Business, Clerical or Professional Man AETNA accident policies provide perfect protection. You can be AETNA-IZED for $5.00. He who buys AETNA protection buys the Best (and the
should be none too good for YOU.) AETNA policies provide more protection for the money than any other policies of their kind ever issued. E. B. KN0LLEN8ERG la the Agent Who Wants to AETNA-I2E You, Women May Also Be Aetna-lzed. Knollenberg Annex
ira
FLOWER AND VEGETABLE
IN PACKAGES AND BULK For the Little Homfi the Big Gardener, the Best Seed on the Market PACKAGES FLOWER AND VEGETABLE 2 FOR 5 CENTS Bulk Seed Much Lower Priced. If you want a nice lawn, better order our Lawn Seed. It's g"- 'em all beaten. Use a little Lawn Fertilizer. We have it at 3 cents per pound.
NOW IS THE TIME TO START GARDENS
Jones Harduare
Co
AT f fiMKFV'Q rirunc 9th "d Ma,n p,ae yu tl IsUillVLI O. UlUyOoet th most change back.-
Handy Package Iptvop Absorbent Cotton 11 A coupon good at tills store for a ten cent package of B & B Handy Package Cotton is In the May Number of these magazines. Ladies Home Journal Designer Woman's Home Companion Pictorial Review New Ideas Woman's Magazine Delineator Rlngllng Bros.' down town ticket office. Buy your ticket Here. "If It Comes From Conkey's, It's Right"
State of Indiana. County of Wayne, as: IKE. Swallow. Cashier of the Northern Wayne Bank, Economy, Ind,
do solemnly swear that the above statement 1 true.
R, E. SWALLOW. Cashier.
Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 25th day of April. 1912.
Minnie C. Beard. Notary Public. Myccmmission expires May IL 1911.
SAVE THIS COUPON. For 6 Coupons run on six consecutive days, with a bonus of 98c, you can get at the Palladium office a $2.50 Dictionary. For $1.16 on same basis as above, yon can get a Webster Revised, with index. This offer is only good to readers of the Palladium. If not already a reader, subscribe today. When the Bible or Dictionary is to be msSsd, edrj 15 cts. for postage. Save Above Coupon.
